Zero Dark Thirty
Directed by Kathryn Bigelow
The Grade: A
In the great battle being waged in the media over the soul
of Zero Dark Thirty, it’s occurred to me
that we seem to be losing track of what the movie is even really about. Anyone
reading this already knows the film chronicles the CIA’s decade-long manhunt
for Osama Bin Laden, but amidst all of the declarations over whether the film
does or doesn’t endorse the use of torture, very few people seem willing to
concede that neither answer is the right one.
What Zero Dark Thirty does
is ask you to answer that question for yourself. And the question isn’t so much
one of whether or not torture works (at least in this portrayal, it does), or
whether or not the United States government used it (we probably did), but
whether the ends justified the means. In her defense of the film, director
Kathryn Bigelow wrote in the Los Angeles Times that she didn’t want to make a
film about war without portraying the “moral consequences” that war entails.
And that’s just one of many things that make Zero Dark Thirty a great film.
Most of the pundits lambasting Zero Dark Thirty for its use of torture are suggesting that, because
the film shows key information being obtained through torture, the inescapable
conclusion is that the film is supporting its use. But this denies the
possibility of something beneficial ever occurring from a mistake. And these
people aren’t watching the film closely, nor are they watching it carefully.
(And sometimes they aren’t watching it at all; some of the “experts” that
weighed in on the issue hadn’t even seen the film yet, as though just knowing
torture was present in the film automatically indicated approval on behalf of
the filmmakers.)
When Inception came
out in the summer of 2010, I watched a different version of the same debate
occur, and it blew my mind then just as it does now. Almost everyone who saw
that film began having a definitive argument over the ending, about whether or
not the top kept spinning, and by extension, whether or not Leonardo DiCaprio’s
character was awake, or lost in an ever expanding dream labyrinth. And everyone
having this argument was invariably suggesting not just that one conclusion was
right and the other was wrong, but that there was a singularly
correct conclusion to be drawn. Eventually the film’s director, Christopher Nolan,
admitted in interviews that there was no right answer, and each viewer was
meant to decide for themselves whether or not they thought the ending took
place in a dream or in the waking world. And this, of course, pissed people
off. What do you mean there isn’t an answer??
It is my belief (and Kathryn Bigelow’s own statements seem
to support this) that Zero Dark Thirty takes
an Inception like position on the
use of torture. And by that I mean it doesn’t take a position at all. It asks
us to figure out our own position based on how we evaluate what we’ve seen. The
film presents its facts (and whether or not they are facts is a whole other
issue, one which I am woefully unqualified to comment on), and asks the viewer
to consider their moral implications. And a few of those facts are the
following: 1) torturing an Al Qaeda member in 2003 gave the CIA a name. And 2)
several years later, the ensuing investigations of that name, as well as
several other elements of data, eventually led to the killing of Osama Bin
Laden. So of course the assumption that many people are making is that the film
suggests that because the torture proved beneficial, it was therefore
justified, or at least acceptable. But why does that have to be the case? The
film doesn’t make that argument, though its detractors certainly wish it did.
Kathryn Bigelow’s films have often been about main
characters that struggle, or abjectly fail, at beginning a next chapter of
their life. At the end of Point Break (a
film that, in hindsight, feels like a minor masterpiece, because it seems like
the first real example of the Auteur Theory for Bigelow), Patrick Swayze’s
Adrenaline Zen God lets himself be crushed to death under a wave rather than
face a life without surfing. In the Oscar-winning The Hurt Locker, the haunting final image is of a military bomb
specialist going back into the fray by choice, because defusing bombs is
apparently less stressful than buying cereal. But Zero Dark Thirty even trumps those great endings. Without spoiling too
much, the film ends with not just one of the best final shots I’ve ever seen,
but also the most penetrating. It’s an image that asks you to look into your
own soul, and wonder whether it was all worth it, whether what was gained
outweighs what was spent.
And Jessica Chastain (as Maya, the CIA analyst who spent ten
years hunting for Bin Laden and made the key intelligence conclusions that led
to him) absolutely owns that final image. Most films reach their emotional
crescendo some time during the climax, but Zero Dark Thirty saves it for the last few moments, and whether or not
it works is purely dependent on Chastain’s ability to get us inside her head. I
had a conversation with someone recently who argued that Chastain’s
performance, while good, wasn’t Oscar-worthy, because there was (his words) “no
difficulty in it.” But imagine knowing that the artistic success of a three
hour film about one of the most important intelligence operations in American
history hinges on how well you convey the emotions on your face during a single
shot. Sound easy? Jessica Chastain gives one of the most searing depictions of
obsession you’ll ever see. At one point in the film, one of her CIA superiors
asks her what else she’s done in her ten years with the agency besides hunt Bin
Laden. “Nothing else,” she says, calm yet confident. “I’ve done nothing else.”
Like so many of the truly great films, Zero Dark Thirty combines impeccable craftsmanship with grand ambition
and something important to say. And the important thing it says is that
sometimes there are no easy answers. Sometimes people make hard choices that in
retrospect might not seem justified. Or they might seem especially justified.
It’s a topic worthy of discussion, both internally and publicly, and Zero
Dark Thirty prompts that discussion in an
incredibly compelling and (it ought to be said) entertaining way. Just so long
as we understand what the discussion is really about.
Now that I have seen the movie...
ReplyDeleteI agree with your assessment that the movie neither endorses nor denounces the use of torture. I think it is presented as fact without making judgement on the moral dilemma it presents. However, I think people's frustrating arises out of the question of whether or not it's true given that the movie is almost presented as more of a documentary. If it's not true then Bigelow purely inserted it for "entertainment" purposes which seems to play against the movie itself. (Although it wouldn't be out of character for Bigelow to insert that portion just as a topic of discussion.) If it is true then it asks all of us as Americans to analyze our own feelings regarding torture and the ultimate question of "was it worth it"? Your last paragraph is spot on.
The movie is phenomenal. I agree that Chastain's performance was Oscar-worthy. I loved her final moments after the pilot asked her the question that would be so simple for most of us to answer.
I do find it humorous in your review that you refer to Leon Panetta as "one of her CIA superiors". Like he was just another bureaucrat at the CIA :)
Ha, yeah, I don't know all of the G-Men quite like you and Sean do. And he's still her superior, right?
DeleteAs for the truth of the torture, you should check out the piece that I linked to where Kathryn Bigelow writes an LA Times column about the controversies of the movie. She addresses it as a "chapter of the story that we just could not ignore."